CMS Unveils Billing, Coding Guidance

CMS and the Medicare Learning Network recently released the Medicare Quarterly Provider Compliance Newsletter; the first in a series of publications intended to offer providers guidance on avoiding common Medicare billing and general errors.

The quarterly newsletter will focus on top issues identified through various sources in each edition, according to CMS. While some of the information presented in the newsletter is an overview of existing guidance, there were a handful of items that providers should note, according to Kimberly Anderwood Hoy, JD, CPC, director of Medicare and Compliance for HCPro, Inc.

Hoy says that there is some ambiguity when it comes to certain guidance.

Under the recommendations for inpatient hospital services—respirator system diagnosis with ventilator support: principal diagnosis on the claim did not match the principal diagnosis in the medical record.

"It's not clear whether or not they are suggesting that there were a lot of self-administered drugs in the outpatient environment prior to the inpatient admission being billed on the claims in error."

CMS also provides some indistinct education on the issue of unnecessary inpatient services or inpatient services in the wrong setting.

"In regard to the medical necessity of inpatient pacemaker cases, they indirectly draw attention to condition code 44 by referencing the coinciding transmittal, which suggests that CMS is saying hospitals should be monitoring pacemakers sooner so that they can apply condition code 44 to these cases," she says.

The American Medical Association is applauding a federal appeals court's ruling that physicians who bill patients after providing services are not subject to Federal Trade Commission so-called red flag rules...

Across the country, dozens of private insurers that run Medicare Advantage plans are preparing to pare dental, vision and certain prescription-drug coverage starting next year, according to consultants who...

Starting Sept. 23, health insurers must file annual reports that summarize what percentage of customers' premiums went to pay medical bills. Health insurers who pay out less than 80% of the premiums they...